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PGA Tour, in surprising decision, will allow its golfers to play in LIV Golf event

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The PGA Tour, in a surprising decision, will let its players participate in an upcoming LIV Golf event.

Tour players can play without penalty next month in the LIV Golf Promotions event, which will award its top three finishers a spot in the 48-player LIV tour next year. Previously, the PGA Tour had deemed LIV Golf events to be “unauthorized events,” and its players who played in them were subject to a one-year Tour suspension.

But in a statement, the Tour said the Promotions event “is determined to be a qualifying event only and not a part of an unauthorized series” — so no suspension. Below is the Tour’s complete statement:

“Based on the information publicly available regarding the LIV Golf Promotion event, it is determined to be a qualifying event only and not a part of an unauthorized series. Therefore, the LIV Golf Promotion event is not categorized as an ‘unauthorized tournament.’ This classification is subject to change should the details of the event change.”

The Promotion event, though, still appears to be the only LIV event that PGA Tour players can play — meaning that should they finish in the top three, they’ll have a decision.

The rule reads as such:

“Any player who has participated in an unauthorized tournament is ineligible to compete in any event sanctioned by the PGA Tour for a period of one year, from the final round of competition of the unauthorized tournament in which he participated.”

The Tour’s declaration is surprising. And maybe revealing.

For one year and two seasons, the Tour and LIV Golf have battled, with players leaving the established brand for the upstart, and various shots being thrown. Then came June. And the biggest stunner: Tour commissioner Jay Monahan was sitting next to Yasir Al-Rumayyan, the governor of the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund — which has backed LIV. The two sides had come to a proposed deal that would create a for-profit entity operated by the sides.  

Key here is the word ‘proposed.’ The agreement on the Tour side needs approval, and there’s been little word on the negotiations. But could this recent decision be a signal of where things are headed?

Maybe. You’re not wrong in thinking this feels like an olive branch. Or it could be nothing.  

As for the Promotions event, it will be played across three days (Dec. 8 to 10) and 72 holes at Abu Dhabi Golf Club in the United Arab Emirates. Entry is $25, it’s open to various, predetermined players, and the purse will be $1.5 million.